Copy
View this email in your browser
Hello, friends!

By now most of you have probably read the United Nations’ IPCC report, or articles summarizing it. The report paints a bleak future, one rife with food shortages, violent weather patterns and wildfires, and a mass die-off of coral reefs. 

I suppose the good news it that the report seems to have sparked a renewed sense of urgency among climate change communicators and activists. The work of artists and writers speaking out about climate change also seems to have gained more visibility in recent weeks. Below you'll find links to some of my favorite recent articles about the fascinating work they're doing.

You'll also find an interview with one of my favorite climate fiction writers, Omar El Akkad. His debut novel, American War, was released in 2017. Prior to writing the book he worked as a journalist, covering a range of stories, including the war in Afghanistan, the Arab Spring revolutions, and the protests in Ferguson, Missouri. In this interview we discuss his novel and its influences, as well as his thoughts on climate fiction more generally. I hope you enjoy our conversation as much as I did.

Until November! --Amy Brady

PS - If you enjoy this newsletter, please spread the word by sharing this link. Thank you!
 
INTERVIEW WITH NOVELIST OMAR EL AKKAD
 
Amy: American War seems influenced by a robust understanding of science and your own experience as a reporter.

Omar: Yes, my novel centers on a Second Civil War, the cause of which is a rift over a federally mandated fossil fuel prohibition. By the time the prohibition comes about, however, climate change has already ravaged much of the United States. The ways in which climate change wreaks havoc on the country are in large part informed by my research into the ongoing effects of rising sea levels and global warming, including myriad interviews I conducted over the years with climate scientists working in communities where climate change is already causing serious damage, such as southern Louisiana and Florida.

Amy: Why does climate change interest you as a novelist?

Omar: I think it’s going to become increasingly impossible for novelists not to engage with climate change. It is a phenomenon that will come to alter every aspect of human life – not only our physical geography, but our emotional geography too. There will soon come a time when memory has to account for the changing of the land – some of the places where our memories took place will, by the end of our lives, either look completely different or not be around at all. A writer cannot write honest fiction and not take stock of such changes.

Amy: Why are fictional accounts of climate change important?

Omar: Fiction is, in many ways, the study of consequences – the consequences of the things we do to ourselves and the things we do to one another. As an author I am not interested in convincing anyone that the science behind climate change is real – I know it to be so and I am, from an emotional and psychological perspective, much more invested in exploring what our lives will look like as the planet changes around us. It’s important for fictional representations of climate change not to misrepresent the science behind the phenomenon, but what is of most interest, at least to me, is not the science, it’s the human consequences.

Amy: Who are some of your influences?

Omar: Among American writers, there are several I consider major influences, chief among them Toni Morrison, who I believe is the finest living American writer. When I was writing American War, I was most influenced by a book called Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, written by James Agee. It’s a nonfiction account of the lives of Depression-era Southern sharecroppers, and although it has little to do with American War in terms of narrative, it deeply influenced my sense of how important it is to capture the minute details of a life that would otherwise be very easy for the rest of the world to ignore.

Amy: Much of your work reads intersectionally along racial, gendered, and economic lines.  

Omar: That's because I think many of the most cataclysmic implications of climate change will have serious consequences that play out along those lines. Some of the places that are most vulnerable to rising sea levels have also, historically, been on the receiving end of colonialism. And once the sea begins to swallow the land in, for example, Bangladesh, it will likely trigger massive waves of migration that, if the current Mediterranean crisis is any indication, will prompt stiff resistance from the predominantly white global North. It’s difficult to extrapolate from the current moment and come to any conclusion other than the worst ripple effects of climate change will include, at least in part, serious ethnic and racial violence.

Amy: What trends have you noticed emerging around depictions of climate change in popular culture?

Omar: Broadly, there seems to be a movement away from the macro to the micro. Instead of focusing on the drowning of entire cities or world-decimating climate events, a lot of creators seem to have become more concerned with the individual response to a changing planet – in terms of both physical and emotional survival. I think there’s a growing consensus that we have run out of time to stop global warming altogether, and that what is worth thinking about now is not whether our lives and the lives of our children will change, but how they will change.

 Amy: What blind spots do you see in recent works of climate fiction?

Omar: It is still, overwhelmingly, focused on the West. Many of the worst climate change consequences will be felt in other parts of the planet, and yet we tend to center the experiences of Europe and North America in our fictional depictions of environmental crises (I am one of the writers at fault here). I think there needs to be serious consideration of what happens when climate change begins to intensely alter the landscape in some of the poorest places on Earth, and what that will mean for the people who live there.




American War is Omar El Akkad's debut novel, available for purchase via Alfred A. Knopf.

Omar El Akkad is an Egyptian-Canadian author and journalist. He has reported from Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay and numerous other locations around the world. He is the recipient of Canada’s National Newspaper Award for Investigative Journalism and the Goff Penny Award for young journalists. His debut novel, American War, is an international bestseller and has been translated into a dozen languages. It won the Pacific Northwest Booksellers’ Award and the Oregon Book Award for fiction, and has been nominated for eight other awards. Omar lives in the woods just south of Portland.

The Burning Worlds newsletter interviews are syndicated monthly on Artists & Climate Change.
October's "Burning Worlds" Column

Paul McAuley, novelist and biologist, discusses his latest novel, Austral, in my October "Burning Worlds" column over at the Chicago Review of Books. We talked about what influenced Austral, his thoughts on the viability of geoengineering, and the one thing he wishes we'd all do to help mitigate global warming. 
 
10 Cli-Fi Novels to Read Right Now

Literary Hub has a great list of 10 cli-fi novels to get you started with the genre. Most or all can be found at your local library and/or independent bookstore.
On the Genius of Kim Stanley Robinson

Wired calls KSR a "genius," and I have to agree with their assessment. The article dives deep into the climate themes of his greatest works. 
Climate Change in Appalachian Art

Over at ArtistsandClimateChange.com (now a "Burning Worlds" interview syndicate), you can read all about a recent art exhibition about water and climate change in Appalachia. 
"An Incomplete Timeline of What We Tried"

A poetic piece that moves backwards from human extinction is up now on Motherboard. It's by Debbie Urbanski, and it's dystopic but gripping.
 
A New Climate Fiction Collection

On October 30th, you can purchase climate themed short stories by Lauren Groff, Edan Lepucki, Jess Walter, and other great writers as part of the Warmer collection. 

YOU'RE INVITED!

"FICTION, FACT, AND 'FACTS:' HOW NOVELS AND FILM SHAPE THE AMERICAN CLIMATE-CHANGE DEBATE"
 
On December 13th I'm moderating a conversation panel at the New York Society Library. Featuring novelists, essayists, and cultural critics, this panel seeks to address these questions and others by exploring how climate change is fundamentally framed in popular culture—and how, in turn, popular culture helps shape our national conversations about the issue. 

Panelists include: 

Jeremy Deaton writes and edits stories about climate and energy for Nexus Media News. His work can be seen in Popular Science, Quartz, Fusion, HuffPo, Business Insider, ThinkProgress, and Grist, among other outlets. 

Omar El Akkad is an Egyptian-Canadian author and journalist. He has reported from Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay and numerous other locations around the world. He is the recipient of Canada’s National Newspaper Award for Investigative Journalism and the Goff Penny Award for young journalists. His debut novel, American War, is an international bestseller and has been translated into a dozen languages. 

Roy Scranton is the author of We're Doomed. Now What?: Essays on War and Climate Change, War Porn, and Learning to Die in the Anthropocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization. His essays on war and climate change have appeared in the New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Best Science and Nature Writing 2014, and elsewhere. 

Ashley Shelby is the author of the novel South Pole Station, which was a New York Times Editor's Choice, a Shelf Awareness Best Novel of 2017, and the winner of the Lascaux Prize in Fiction. She is also a former environmental journalist whose work appeared in the Nation, Sierra, and other outlets. 

Michael Svoboda is a professor of writing at George Washington University. He earned his interdisciplinary PhD in Hermeneutics from Penn State University, where he also owned and operated an academic bookstore for 17 years. His research interests encompass two different disciplines: ancient rhetoric and environmental communication. In 2010 he became a regular contributor to Yale Climate Connections—formerly The Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media—for which he now curates a monthly column on books and reports related to climate change.

Registration is free but required. Save your spot today!

 
ART OPENINGS, READINGS, AND OTHER EVENTS*
 
 
*Want your event listed? Send links to Amy at amybradywrites@gmail.com
ABOUT THE EDITOR: Amy Brady is the deputy publisher of Guernica magazine and the senior editor of the Chicago Review of Books, where she writes a monthly column called “Burning Worlds.” It’s dedicated to exploring how contemporary fiction addresses issues of climate change. This newsletter expands that project by looking at the work of artists in all mediums. Amy’s writing on literature, culture, and the environment can be found or is forthcoming in The Village Voice, the Los Angeles Times, Pacific Standard, The Dallas Morning News, McSweeney’s, Literary Hub, and elsewhere. To learn more about Amy’s work, visit her website: AmyBradyWrites.com.
-------------------------------------------------
This newsletter may be duplicated and forwarded as long as it remains unaltered and is replicated in its entirety. 

-------------------------------------------------
Information contained in “Burning Worlds” is collected from many sources and is researched to the best of the editor's ability. Readers should verify information. 
-------------------------------------------------
"Burning Worlds" logo designed by Cheryl Burke (www.TheoryOneDesign.com).

 
Copyright © 2018 Burning Worlds, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Amy Brady
223 Bedford Avenue #1003
Brooklyn, NY 11211


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

 






This email was sent to <<Email Address>>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
Amy Brady · 223 Bedford Avenue #1003 · Brooklyn, NY 11211 · USA

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp